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tv   ABC World News  ABC  May 21, 2016 5:30pm-6:01pm PDT

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your homes. we'll see you at 6:00. welcome to "world news tonight." new clues in the mystery of flight 804. pieces of the missing jet picked up at sea, the new recordings from the cockpit. >> thank you so much. good day. have a good night. >> and now smoke detected inside that plane. what happened in those final moments? donald trump on a twitter tirade against hillary clinton over guns. why he says she doesn't deserve secret service protection. breaking news, not one but two race horses collapse and die at the start of a big day at the track. distracted drivers beware. vigilantes taking matters into their own hands when you take your hands off the wheel. >> you're endangering your child, as well as everybody else that's on the roadways. and the all girl baseball team taking on the boys, already
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in a league of their own. >> i want to beat the boys! ♪ let's go peaches >> good evening, and thank you for joining us on this saturday. i'm cecilia vega, and we begin tonight with the mystery of egyptair flight 804. we are hearing for the first time the pilots' radio calls and now the new clues. we know there was smoke on that plane during its final moments. so was there a mechanical failure too? today the egyptian military gathering pieces of debris floating in the sea. among them mangled parts of the plane itself. there at the left, a child's pink backpack. those objects signs of the lives lost. and we are learning more about those passengers tonight, too, including the parents on their way home, their children waiting for them at the airport. abc's matt gutman starts us off from cairo. >> reporter: as the physical
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remnants of that doomed plane were laid out on a ship, tonight we hear for the first time the voices of the men flying it. >> hello, hello, egyptair 804 flight 370. >> reporter: that's a recording of the flight deck's communications with the air traffic control tower early thursday. their final words chillingly mundane. >> thank you so much. good day. have a good night. >> reporter: minutes later that plane would disappear from radar, cause still unknown. what was apparent today, the violence of that breakup. the grisly haul spotted from the air and scooped up by small inflatables like this. it included parts of the plane itself, twisted pieces of metal with the egyptair logo, the shredded and waterlogged remnants of a seat, a life jacket that was never inflated, and also the possessions of the people it carried -- clothes, a purse. tonight the search for more of the wreckage ramping up on its third day, aided by 24-hour-a-day flights by u.s. aircraft using sophisticated equipment to scan the water.
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and now abc news has learned ships able to scan the ocean floor also sailing into place hoping to find the black boxes, which could be in water 10,000 feet deep. as search crews scour the area, families mourn. grief bringing this grandmother to her knees, and three children who waited to greet their parents at the airport. their mother was returning triumphant after successful cancer treatment, only that plane never landed. for those families, seeing how badly mangled the debris was must have shattered all hope that anyone could have survived. the reason the plane went down still very much a mystery tonight. isis releasing a 30-minute diatribe against the west but not claiming responsibility for bringing the plane down. cecilia? >> so many questions still. matt, thank you. next to the search for answers about what happened to that flight. investigators are now looking closely at alerts indicating there was smoke in the cabin, and that is raising new
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questions about what may have caused flight 804 to come down. abc's david kerley with that part of the story. >> reporter: it could have been smoke, even fire, rather than a bomb that brought down the egyptair jet. >> could a fire actually overtake the crew in a matter of moments? >> the smoke could. the smoke is what gets to -- what brings airplanes down when there's fire in the cockpit. >> reporter: the airbus 830 was equipped with a data transmission system called acars which french investigators say sent seven messages in the final moments of the flight. alarmingly, one message came from the avionics, the equipment bay. this is where the jet's electronics and computers are housed. that bay is right below the cockpit in the forward lavatory. at 2:26 a.m., messages sent to the satellite and the pilots. window sensor warnings. seconds later this pops up, lavatory smoke. then only a minute passes and another message, this time avionics smoke. at 2:29 signals warning of trouble with the flight control systems, and then, nothing. no further transmissions.
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the a-320 disappears from radar. >> if it was a bomb, could have been a bomb, it would have been something that would have caused a fire, not a blast. also, it's very difficult to get this kind of bomb in the avionics bay. >> reporter: it's those black boxes now on the bottom of the mediterranean which will tell us exactly what happened. listening equipment like this will likely be deployed soon when searchers think they are near the wreckage, listening for those black box pingers. their batteries may die as early as three and a half weeks from tonight. if it turns out to be a mechanical/electrical issue, that would be a major concern because the a-320 is one of the most popular jet liners in the world. nearly 7,000 have been delivered by airbus. cecilia? >> a concerning prospect indeed. david kerley, thank you. next to that scare at the white house. an armed man at a security checkpoint refusing to drop his weapon. then shot by the secret service. it happened yesterday afternoon. the president was not there at the time. tonight the gunman identified as
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jesse olivieri of ashland, pennsylvania. he is in the hospital. no word yet on a motive. and in maryland tonight an upset at the preakness. exaggerator finishing first, ending nyquist's bid for the triple crown. but the day began on a somber note with the death of two horses. as abc's ron claiborne reports, it has happened at this track before. >> reporter: it was the first race at pimlico on preakness day. >> homeboykris gets home to win it by a head in the opener. >> reporter: the winner, a 9-to-1 longshot named homebykris. the 9-year-old showing no signs of trouble as his jockey walked him around the track afterward, but minutes later, on his way back to his barn, homeboykris collapsed and died. three races later, misfortune struck again. this time a 4-year-old filly named pramedya went down mid-race with a fractured front leg. she was euthanized right on the track. her jockey suffering a broken collar. >> it's just so untimely and so
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unfortunate to have two horses lose their lives when the world really is watching on maryland's biggest day of racing. >> reporter: in a tragic irony pramedya's owners also owned barbaro, the kentucky derby winner who shattered his leg in the preakness ten years ago and had to be put down eight months later. horse racing is an arduous, risky sport. nearly 500 race horses die each year. tonight that danger highlighted on one of the sport's biggest days. an autopsy will be performed on homebykris but a heart attack is what is suspected. tonight his owner saying in a statement, "kris had a small team who loved him. we are all heartbroken." cecilia. >> okay, ron, thank you. we turn next to the race for the white house. guns at the center of the debate tonight. donald trump saying hillary clinton's stance on guns means she does not deserve secret service protection. this a day after his big meeting with the nra. clinton tonight holding a
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meeting of her own with victims of gun violence. here's abc's david wright with the latest war of words. >> reporter: one day after locking up the nra endorsement -- >> crooked hillary clinton is the most anti-gun, anti-second amendment candidate ever to run for office. >> reporter: donald trump aimed an outrageous tweet at his likely democratic opponent, suggesting her secret service detail lay down their weapons. "crooked hillary wants to get rid of all guns, and yet she is surrounded by bodyguards who are fully armed. no more guns to protect hillary." it's an idea he first raised in the nra speech. >> let's see how they feel walking around without their guns on their bodyguards. >> reporter: clinton has made reducing gun violence a centerpiece of her campaign in ads such as this one. >> she is the only candidate that has what it takes to take on the gun lobby. >> reporter: she's never said that gun ownership should be banned. she has called for stricter background checks, more
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accountability for gun manufacturers, and stronger efforts to keep guns away from terrorists, violent criminals and the mentally ill, tweeting, "you're wrong, donald trump. we can uphold second amendment rights while preventing senseless gun violence." tonight she's the keynote speaker at an event with mothers who lost their children to gun violence, including trayvon martin's mom. her son, killed by george zimmerman in 2012. clinton's views on guns have remained pretty consistent. trump's not so much. in the past he's been critical of the gun lobby, and while he told the nra he would get rid of gun-free zones, he might have to start with some of his own properties. cecilia? >> david wright, thank you. we turn to a major development from the conflict in afghanistan and pakistan tonight. a u.s. official saying the head of the taliban was targeted and likely killed in an air strike. mullah mansour was reportedly struck in an air strike operated
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by u.s. special operations forces in a remote area of pakistan. the strike authorized by the president. and next to the zika emergency. the number of pregnant women with the infection suddenly tripling. the cdc had been reporting 48 pregnant women with zika here in the u.s. tonight that number jumping to 157. and now a new country facing an ominous prospect. abc's gio benitez reporting in from miami. >> reporter: tonight a baby in yet another country may have the birth defect caused by zika. if confirmed, costa rica would become the ninth territory to have an infant born with an abnormally small head linked to the virus. this comes after the cdc's release of troubling new numbers friday. pregnant women in the u.s. and puerto rico infected with zika spiking to nearly 300 cases. the reason for the jump? the cdc was not including women who showed no symptoms. they now acknowledge those expectant moms do have a higher
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risk of having a child with a birth defect. >> they can have an asymptomatic infection, but this can still affect their newborns. >> reporter: sara mujica is the first pregnant american woman with zika who has come forward after contracting it in honduras. >> it was just like such hard news to take in all at once, and my first thought was "what am i gonna do?" and i asked my mom what am i gonna do? >> reporter: she's now decided to have her baby. cecilia, what's so concerning to doctors right now is that women are being infected in puerto rico. that's just 1,000 miles away from here, not such a distant threat anymore. cecilia? >> ok, gio, thank you. we want to turn now to record deadly heat in india. temperatures in the northwestern part of the country reaching almost 124 degrees in recent days, breaking a 60-year record. that hot weather blamed for hundreds of deaths. the heat rising above 100
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degrees every day for weeks now. relief not expected until next month when monsoon season begins. here at home in arizona's mojave valley, wild winds are fueling fierce wildfires. you can see right there the thick smoke billowing across the desert, evacuations ordered. officials blamed a downed power line or a transformer for that blaze that has now devoured 400 acres and counting. next to the severe weather. a tornado watch in three states at this hour, and now the threat of thunderstorms in the plains, too. take a look at this, up to eight inches of hail falling, that's in the black hills of south dakota. some tough driving there. abc meteorologist indra petersons is here tracking it all. that didn't look like spring and you're watching even more. >> yeah, it actually almost looked like snow, all thanks to this weather pattern we're looking at now. the jet stream has dropped far south in the west. that means that cool air is banking against the heat in the
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plains and that clash is causing all that instability. tonight looking at tornado watches. focusing on eastern colorado as well as the texas panhandle. as we go through this evening and tomorrow, look at the difference. we're talking about the system expanding from texas all the way through the dakotas. this is the epitome of tornado ally. we're not just looking for the severe weather with thunderstorms but now also the threat for isolated tornados. unfortunately, this threat continues not just through the weekend but as we go through the middle of next week, cecilia. >> rough weather ahead. indra, thank you. some rough going at america's airports tonight. long lines of weekend travelers snaking through the hartsfield-jackson airport in atlanta just waiting to get through the security check. now the head of the tsa with a dire warning, summer travel will not get much better. here's abc's mary bruce on one way fliers are getting through those long lines just a little faster. >> reporter: one week out from the memorial day rush, travelers are bracing themselves for more of this. in seattle, marathon lines. >> these lines are ridiculous.
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i travel a lot. >> reporter: the same problem in charlotte. >> look at the chaos that goes on here. >> reporter: and in chicago where it's been the worst, travelers are giving themselves plenty of time today. >> they told us to come early because it's taking so long. there was nobody here. >> reporter: but don't expect that to last. this summer 2.5 million of us will fly every day. >> the summer is going to continue to be a challenge. >> reporter: the tsa is adding over 760 agents but they say that's a drop in the bucket. to fix the problem for good, they say they need more money. >> they have to move faster. therefore, something's going to give sooner or later. >> reporter: at least one airport is taking matters into their own hands. in seattle they've hired 90 contractors. and fliers are flocking to tsa pre-check. enrollment for the $85 program doubling in the last month. a whopping 16,000 people are signing up on average each day. the tsa is encouraging travelers to sign up for that pre-check. but now even some of these preferred security lines are
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reportedly getting backed up. cecilia. >> that is not good news. mary, thank you. still ahead on "world news tonight" this saturday, new developments in the death of music legend prince. how long did it take investigators to find his body? and drivers taking on and taking off after other drivers, shaming them for being distracted. so are they vigilantes or good samaritans? perfect driving record. perfect. no tickets. no accidents. that is until one of you clips a food truck, ruining your perfect record. yeah. now you would think your insurance company would cut you some slack, right? no. your insurance rates go through the roof... your perfect record doesn't get you anything. anything. perfect. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. see car insurance in a whole new light.
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back seat. >> reporter: this concerned man recording people he says are texting and driving. >> you're endangering your child as well as everybody else that's on the roadways. >> reporter: then posting those confrontations on youtube. that wyoming man is not the only one calling people out online. in california a passenger catching another driver she says was snapping a selfie while behind the wheel. >> she's taking a selfie. >> reporter: in dallas there's a facebook page devoted to outing distracted drivers. but is it safe? >> you don't know who you're dealing with. the person can be somebody who's armed with a weapon and so forth, and it just puts yourself in a bad situation. >> reporter: big brother is watching, too, cracking down on the 660,000 drivers on their cell phones while driving. the national highway traffic safety administration discovering this driver tweeting, "i'm either texting and driving, eating and driving or sometimes both." nhtsa responding, "put down the phone and #just drive." experts say you can safely glance away from the road for
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two seconds. sending a text message however takes on average five seconds. cecilia? >> eva, thank you. we have a lot more to get to this saturday. so how do you get a 154-foot long nasa shuttle part to its new home? well, that's how. and when boat meets balloon. these passengers getting much more adventure than they ever bargained for. more adventure than they ever bargained for. doctor about your. this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira helping me go further. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. doctors have been prescribing humira for over 13 years. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood,
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new revelations about the death of prince. paramedics now say the singer had been dead for at least six hours in that elevator before his body was discovered. this from the minneapolis "star tribune." the autopsy due out in a week or two. and a rather unusual sight in the usual l.a. traffic. this is a space shuttle fuel tank taking a slow roll through city streets today, all 66,000 pounds of it, on the way to its new home at the california science center. and now to things that are supposed to stay airborne but that don't. nine passengers on a hot air balloon in australia jumping to safety onto boats. they began to run out of fuel over this bay, but boaters to the rescue. the balloon pilot tonight also praised for getting people fely from air to water. and that is no easy feat. when we come back, there is no crying in baseball. >> i really want to be a baseball player when i grow up. >> the little leaguers with the major league difference.
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contact your health plan for the latest information. and you may now be covered. once i left the hospital after a dvt blood clot. what about my wife... ...what we're building together... ...and could this happen again? i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me? i spoke to my doctor and she told me about eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. not only does eliquis treat dvt and pe blood clots.
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but eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. knowing eliquis had both... ...turned around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless you doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious, and in rare cases, fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily... and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt & pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made switching to eliquis right for me. ask your doctor if it's right for you. this clean was like - pow. everything well? it felt like i had just gone to the dentist. my teeth are glowing. they are so white. 6x cleaning*, 6x whiteningá*
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shocking even their own coach. >> this is insane, i can't believe it. >> reporter: with hit after hit. >> guess what, you got it. >> reporter: out after out, they are peaches and they are tough. >> all the boys at our school think they're better at baseball than us and i kind of feel really good when we get it better because it proves them wrong, finally. ♪ let's go peaches >> reporter: and just like in the movie about the team they're named after -- >> are you crying? there's no crying in baseball! >> there's no crying in baseball. >> there's no crying in baseball. i'm right with that. >> reporter: no crying here. >> i really want to be a baseball player when i grow up. >> reporter: these little girls are in a little league of their own. >> it just shows that girls can do it, too. >> who are we? >> peaches! >> there is no crying in baseball. "gma" and "this week" in the morning. thanks for spending your saturday with us. i'm cecilia vega.
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have a great night. next, a break in a bay area murder case as law enforcement raids a mansion, taking suspects into custody. >> from one business to the next. >> burned theground. fire destroys self businesses on a busy east oakland block. a soggy saturday in parts of the bay area could be a preview of sunday. abc7 news at 6:00 starts now. >> a hillsboro mansion raided with at least two suspects taken into custody. today law enforcement took a big step in the investigation of a missing bay area man. thank you for joining us. keying green went missing in april, today law enforcement raided the home of his ex-girlfriend and mother of his
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two children and took her into custody along with another man. sir gentlemen kin fan sir joe is live with details. >> reporter: neighbors tell me it was a full police tactical operation here overnight, as you mentioned there were two people arrested in a murder investigation. neighbors say the gate was busted open with an armored police vehicle, and officers swarmed the property. >> the police had surrounded the house. they were in our yard. they were on a loud speaker, first in english and then either mandarin for cantonnese. they were cawing for the people to come out. >> reporter: one resident who lives here, tiffany li is in police custody. a second suspect is in jail but not clear if he was arrested at the scene. several neighbors say at least three people left this house this morning with their hands up

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